A selection of recent media reports

Police battle to control EDL and UAF protest in Bolton
Police are trying to contain thousands of demonstrators from the English Defence League (EDL) and Unite Against Fascism ...
BBC News Beds, Bucks & Herts (20-Mar-2010)
Rise in marriages between cousins 'putting children at risk of birth defects', warns Baroness
A rise in the number of marriages between cousins in Britain has prompted calls for a crackdown on the practice amid war...
The Mail On Sunday (20-Mar-2010)
Jail for illegal immigrant who tended to drugs
An illegal immigrant caught tending to 350 plants in a cannabis factory has been jailed for two...
This is Leicestershire (20-Mar-2010)
MIGRANTS FOUND LIVING IN FAMILY TREE HOUSE
SQUATTERS have set up a tree house after invading the gardens of family homes. They have constructed makeshift shelters...
Daily Star (20-Mar-2010)
UK BETTER OFF OUT OF EU
THE only way to solve Britains economic and immigration problems is to leave Europe, the UK Independence Party said last...
Daily Express (20-Mar-2010)
FOREIGN WORKER CURBS ONLY CUT 3,000
TIGHTER rules to cover highly skilled migrant workers will only cut the number of them coming to Britain by about 3,000 ...
Daily Express (20-Mar-2010)
Residents powerless to remove illegal immigrants from their gardens
At first sight, the piles of rubbish and debris strewn across this garden make it look just like a rubbish tip.
Daily Mail (19-Mar-2010)
IMMIGRANT S 16-MILE CHANNEL TUNNEL U-TURN
AN ILLEGAL immigrant walked 16 miles through the Channel Tunnel to the UK before changing his mind and telling police: ...
Daily Express (19-Mar-2010)
MPs debate visa rights for migrant domestic workers
Martin Salter, Labour MP for Reading West, opened a debate in Westminster Hall to highlight the abuse of migrant domesti...
The United Kingdom Parliament (18-Mar-2010)
Immigrant flees 'racist' Brits
AN exhausted illegal immigrant spent hours trying to cross into the UK before abandoning the attempt because Brits "ar...
Online Sun (18-Mar-2010)
Le Pen's back, and winning again
Fuelled by Nicolas Sarkozy's anti-Muslim 'identity' debate, the Front National is punching above its weight in regional....
Guardian.co.uk (18-Mar-2010)
Heads should be able to fire BNP teachers, says David Cameron
Tory leader's attempt to reach out to black voters continues at event in south-east...
Guardian.co.uk (18-Mar-2010)
£60k sex swap for migrant
A TURKISH transsexual woman granted UK asylum is having at least £60,000-worth of NHS surgery to become a man called...
Online Sun (18-Mar-2010)
Minister announces over £750,000 of Inclusion Grant Funding
Social Justice and Local Government Minister Carl Sargeant has announced £766,190 of funding to support organisations th...
Welsh Assembly Government (17-Mar-2010)
Extra funds as primary pupil numbers rise in Bristol
More than £2m will have to be spent on extra classrooms in Bristol primary schools to cope with more pupils. The demand...
BBC News Bristol (17-Mar-2010)
CONVICTED RAPIST WHO FLED COUNTRY HUNTED IN HOLLAND
A RUNAWAY rapist whose bid to dodge justice sparked an outcry is being hunted in the ­Netherlands, it was revealed...
Daily Express (17-Mar-2010)
Euroworld raided after illegal workers tip-off
Mailing house Euroworld Direct Marketing could face a £90,000 fine for knowingly employing illegal workers following a r...
PrintWeek (17-Mar-2010)
Multiculturalism undermines diversity
Kenan Malik: Cif is four: As a political policy, multiculturalism's desire to put people in boxes has left many minoriti...
U TV (17-Mar-2010)
Factbox - Voters' views on "Broken Britain"
REDDITCH, England (Reuters) - Concern about crime regularly comes top in opinion polls of British voters despite figures...
Reuters UK (17-Mar-2010)
Leeds takeaway raids: Seven more workers held
Fingerprint scanners and spot ID checks uncovered seven suspected illegal workers at two Leeds...
Yorkshire Evening Post (17-Mar-2010)

'This would only make a bad situation worse' Commentary

By Andrew Green
Chairman of Migration Watch UK
The Daily Telegraph, London, 08 May, 2007

Welcome to Great Britain - the softest touch in the world. That is the message sent out by yesterday's demonstration in Trafalgar Square. It may have been well intentioned - but it was also deeply misguided.

The immigration lobby, together with some church leaders are proposing that illegal immigrants who have been here for four or more years should be admitted to a " two year pathway" to full legal rights. This would entitle them to access to the welfare state and citizenship eventually. They could also bring over their families.

This is an amnesty in all but name.

There are somewhere between 500,000 and a million illegal immigrants here. Some arrived on the back of a truck, some overstayed their visas. Others are failed asylum seekers the Government has failed to remove. Many are being exploited by their employers. The Chinese cockle pickers drowned in Morecambe Bay are the most obvious example.

This hidden labour force holds down wages for all unskilled workers and enables unscrupulous employers to undercut honest ones. It also damages the reputation of legal immigrants.

An amnesty will be pointless if those who are legalised are simply replaced. Some 70 per cent of illegal immigrants are brought here by people-smugglers who will be the first to spot a new market.

Others will be tempted to overstay on visitor or student visas to work at less than the minimum wage but for more than they could earn at home.

Even now migrants are lining up in Sangatte for an opportunity to get to Britain. The prospect of an amnesty will attract even more. Italy and Spain have each granted five or six amnesties in the last 20 years and almost every time have faced even more applications.

An amnesty would be expensive for the tax payer. The immigration lobby is claiming a net gain to the Exchequer of between £500 million to £1 billion. This takes no account of the extra cost of adding 500,000 people to the welfare state.

More immediate is the effect on housing. Once granted Leave to Remain, these migrants will become entitled to social housing. As single people they would join a waiting list. If their families arrived they would move up the priority list.

There is already a sense of unfairness among the indigenous working class. They feel that they have paid into the system for many years while new arrivals immediately claim benefits. Indeed, 76 per cent of the public oppose an amnesty. The Government ignores such strong feelings at its peril.

So what is the alternative? First, we must restore control of our borders, including checking people in and out by name. This is now planned but it will be years before it is in place.

Second, we need to bear down on employers of illegal workers. The Government has spoken of heavy fines, the use of the Proceeds of Crime Act and prison sentences for company directors.

However, in the last five years there has been only a handful of successful prosecutions. Even now there are only about a dozen officials devoted to this task.

The third step is to permit illegal immigrants to leave Britain without risk of arrest. Some have been imprisoned after being arrested for an immigration offence on their way out.

A departure amnesty would make sense, especially combined with tighter regulation of the job market and restricting access to our education, health and welfare state.

The prospect of an amnesty will only retain the illegals we have and attract more. It will shift the exploitation to another group of victims and will perpetuate the undercutting of honest employers and workers. In reality, it is foolishness. It would make a bad situation worse.

Sir Andrew Green is a former British Ambassador to Saudi Arabia and Syria.

© Copyright of Sir Andrew Green
The Daily Telegraph, London, 08 May, 2007

http://www.dailytelegraph.co.uk/